Last year, total income from insurance premiums in Costa Rica accumulated $ 1,449 million, 8% more than reported in the previous year, a variation that doubles the 3.5% increase recorded between 2017 and 2018.
The 8% growth recorded in 2019 doubles the variation recorded in 2018, when the upturn amounted to 4%. According to the Superintendencia General de Seguros (SUGESE), the dynamism of the sector's sales represents not only a significant increase in the market, but also one that has been sustained over the last 11 years.
In the first eleven months of 2019, premiums were written in the country for Ch$1,395 million, and sales of personal accident insurance grew 7% over the same period last year.
Figures of the General Comptroller of the Republic detail that between the first eleven months of 2018 and the same period of 2019, fire and multi-risk insurance premiums recorded a 10% increase.
From January to August 2019, premiums of $1.026 million were subscribed, surpassing by 3% the $997 million reported in the same period of 2018, an increase lower than the 5% increase reported in July.
According to the most recent figures from the General Comptroller's Office of the Republic, between the first eight months of 2018 and the same period of 2019 the premiums for fire and multi-risk insurance registered a 16% increase.
In July 2019, the branches with the highest growth compared to the same month in 2018 were Health with 56%, Bail Bonds with 41% and Air and Maritime Ships with 41%.
From the Superintendence of Insurance report:
Net premiums collected in July reached RD$6,501,787,017 million, with an absolute growth of RD$1,456,663,584 million and a relative growth of 28.87% compared to the previous year.
During the first six months of this year, net premium income totaled $395 million, 9% more than reported in the same period in 2018, an increase explained by life and fire policies.2
According to data from the Salvadoran Association of Insurance Companies (ASES), between the first half of 2018 and the same period in 2019, net premium income grew by $34 million, from $361 million to $395 million.
Last year, net premium income in El Salvador totaled $658 million, 5% more than reported in 2017, a rise explained by accident and health insurance.
According to data from the Salvadoran Association of Insurance Companies (ASES), during 2018 the area of accident and health insurance recorded sales of premiums of $128 million, which is equivalent to a 14% increase over what was reported in 2017.
Between 2017 and 2018, the number of people insured against accidents and diseases grew 17%, from 1.6 million to 1.9 million.
According to figures from the Quarterly Bulletin of Financial Inclusion Indicators, December 2018, compiled by the Superintendence of Banks, since 2016 there has been a sustained increase in the number of insured persons.
In the first eleven months of 2018, premiums of $1.378 million were underwritten in Panama, exceeding by 6% the value reported in the same period of 2017.
The latest data from the Superintendence of Insurance and Reinsurance, detail that between the first eleven months of 2017 and the same period of 2018, the value of premiums underwritten went from $1.301 million to $1.378 million.
In the first seven months of this year in Panama, $864 million worth of premiums were written, an amount that exceeds by 3% the value reported in the same period in 2017.
According to figures from the Superintendency of Insurance and Reinsurance, between the first seven months of 2017 and the same period in 2018, the value of subscribed premiums went from $839 million to $864 million.
Between the first semester of last year and the same period in 2018 the value of premiums written in El Salvador saw almost no change, following the line of the weak growth of 1% reported between 2016 and 2017.
According to the Salvadoran Association of Insurance Companies (ASES), insurers reported premiums of $306.5 million in June of this year, which is equivalent to an increase of just 0.11% compared to the $306.2 million recorded up to the same month in 2017.
In the first five months of the year, total income from insurance premiums in Costa Rica added up to $682 million, registering an increase of 6% compared to the same period in 2017.
Between January and May of this year, growth of mandatory insurance was mainly due to the 14% increase registered in occupational risk premiums, according to a report by the General Superintendence of Insurance.
Growth in Personal Accident and Individual Life policies accounted for most of the 12% growth recorded during the fifth month of the year in the Dominican Republic.
In May, compared to 2017, the lines that reported the highest growth were: Bonds, 132%; Personal Accident, 41%; and Individual Life, 34%, reported the Superintendency of Insurance.
In Panama during the first four months of the year $491 million was written in premiums, which is 3% more than the $375 million reported in the same period in 2017.
Statistics from the Superintendency of Insurance show that during the first four months of 2018, the three insurance companies that wrote the largest proportion of these premiums were Assa Compañía de Seguros, Compañía Internacional de Seguros and Mapfre Panamá, with 20%, 17%, and 16%, respectively.
According to the union of insurers in El Salvador, between January and March net premiums totalled $149 million, 2% less than the $152 million reported in the same period in 2017.
After registering a modest 2% growth between 2016 and 2017, representatives of the Salvadoran Insurance Association (ASES) reported that during the first quarter of the year a 2% drop in contracted premiums was reported, compared to the months from January to March 2017.
Growth in policies for health and boats and aircrafts accounted for most of the 19% growth recorded in the first quarter of the year.
Data from the Superintendency of Insurance indicates that during the third month of the year the agricultural and livestock sector registered an increase of 64% compared to March 2017, followed by health insurance, whose premiums increased by 27%.